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Ex-telecoms chief calls for innovation
By Shen Jingting ( China Daily European Edition )
2012-March-30

Ex-telecoms chief calls for innovation
Wang Jianzhou, who recently retired as chairman of China Mobile, says he was happy to be part of the telecom revolution. Provided to China Daily 

Wang Jianzhou describes his three decades at China Mobile as exciting

On March 22, Wang Jianzhou retired from his work as chairman of China Mobile Communications Corp and the group's listed subsidiaries. During a farewell meeting he delivered a short speech. When he finished, thunderous applause broke out and Wang gave a deep bow to colleagues. The applause went on and on, so Wang stood up and bowed again.

Some people said they were deeply moved at that point. "I couldn't see his face, but I had a view of an old man's back. I almost burst into tears because he had been with us for so many years," says a China Mobile official, who declined to be named.

In his last exclusive media interview during his tenure, which was with China Daily on March 9, Wang confessed he enjoyed every day of the past three decades working in the telecommunications industry. "The work was exciting. My biggest wish and pleasure is to see mobile technology innovations change people's ways of living, working and studying," Wang says.

Born in Hangzhou, the capital city of Zhejiang province, Wang remembers he only called home once in three years when he lived in the countryside in the late 1960s.

It took him three hours to get through and hear his parents' voices. He had had to walk for half a day along mountain tracks to get to the nearest village's post and telecommunications office.

Times have changed. By the end of February, China had 1 billion cellphone users. Even in rural areas, many farmers own mobile handsets. In big cities, some people have more than one cellphone. Wang carries five handsets, using them to test the quality of wireless networks.

Wang took the helm of China Mobile in 2004. Over the past seven years, the company has consolidated its leading position in the domestic market. Boasting a huge subscriber base and market value, it has undergone rapid development.

In particular, between 2004 and 2008, China Mobile achieved double-digit growth rates both in revenue and net profit. Wang describes it as an "elephant running".

In 2004, the revenue and net profit of China Mobile Ltd was 192.4 billion yuan ($30.5 billion, 22.9 billion euros) and 42 billion yuan, respectively. The figures almost tripled and reached 528 billon yuan and 125.9 billion yuan in 2011. The combined net profit of rivals China Unicom (Hong Kong) Ltd and China Telecom Corp Ltd in 2011 was 20.7 billion yuan.

During the same period, China Mobile's subscriber base grew to about 650 million in 2011 from 204 million in 2004. The company started to provide third-generation (3G) wireless network services in 2009, and achieved more than 51 million 3G service users, or about 40 percent of China's 3G market, by the end of 2011, the most among the three Chinese operators.

One of the most important driving forces of China Mobile's development came from the exploration of China's rural market, which has a population of more than 700 million.

When Wang first came up with the idea to extend China Mobile's services to rural areas, investors raised opposition because they thought such business would bring little profit for the company.

However, Wang insisted on the strategy and created a practical business model for low-end rural users by slicing the marketing cost greatly.

The financial results showed that Wang was right. In the following three years from 2006 to 2008, the average profit growth rate reached 28.3 percent annually. The increase in subscribers became the major earnings momentum and nearly half of new users came from rural markets.

For Wang, the service coverage in rural areas had more significance than merely making money. An extraordinary company stands out because of its contribution to society, rather than its huge scale, Wang wrote in his book Davos Notes, which was published in September.

"I cannot imagine a more beautiful picture than a farmer using a mobile phone near his farm house, with the blue sky and green fields," Wang says.

China Mobile is very much a State-owned company. It shoulders the responsibilities of constructing telecommunication facilities, providing telecom services and hands over profits to the government. However, unlike most State-owned enterprises, such as banks and oil companies, China Mobile demonstrates a noticeable characteristic - a willingness to embrace innovation.

Wang says the telecom industry changes fast and mobile Internet is perhaps the biggest ongoing change.

Mobile Internet is a convergence of the telecom industry and the Internet industry. Therefore, Internet companies and handset manufacturers compete for market share, which squeezes the profits of traditional telecom businesses, such as voice and text messaging, and pressured telecom operators to transform.

As more people use mobile phones to surf the Internet, Wang estimates that in the future the volume of data will be more than that of voice alone, and telecom operators should prepare for that.

"The data business will become more and more important," he says.

As early as 2000, China Mobile introduced the "Monternet" platform, which enables customers to get access to various value-added services, such as short message services and Color Ring, a service that allows subscribers to customize ring tones.

After Wang took office, China Mobile took even bigger strides toward new business fields.

The company started to build up nine business bases in different Chinese cities from 2006, including a wireless music base in Chengdu and a mobile video base in Shanghai. The function of the nine bases is to produce content and find effective business models in the mobile Internet era.

Like some innovative companies in the Internet industry, China Mobile also developed its own mobile operating system, called Ophone, in 2009, and an instant messaging tool, Fetion, which has close to 100 million active users.

In China Mobile's mobile Internet strategy, its application store, the Mobile Market, is expected to play a core role. The Mobile Market is the world's first mobile phone application store set up by a telecom operator. After it was launched in August 2009, the number of apps grew to more than 95,000 by October 2011.

A fluent English speaker, Wang is a man with a global vision. His amiable nature and openness to partners, investors and the media has helped China Mobile increase its brand recognition around the world.

However, to truly lift the influence of China Mobile in the world, the company should expand its business overseas, Wang says. The global market will provide new revenue engines, especially when China Mobile faces domestic challenges arising from industry convergence, intensified competition and increasingly high mobile penetration.

The mobile giant has only conducted one overseas acquisition so far. It bought Paktel Ltd, a loss-making Pakistani carrier, in 2007 for $284 million (213 million euros) from Millicom International Cellular SA. The company was renamed China Mobile Pakistan, or CMPak, and its services were rebranded as "Zong" in 2008.

"More than four years ago, when we bought Paktel, it was on the brink of bankruptcy. Now the company can generate enough cash flow to maintain its operations," Wang says.

With Pakistan as an example, China Mobile intends to expand its operations to a greater number of emerging markets. The company is also seeking opportunities to become a minority shareholder in telecom carriers in the European or North American markets, Wang says.

Another aspect of China Mobile's globalization is to promote the homegrown Time Division Long-Term Evolution (TD-LTE) 4G technology to be adopted worldwide.

Compared with FDD-LTE, another 4G technology, the world has been slow to adopt TD-LTE technology. Five commercial TD-LTE networks have gone into operation in countries such as Saudi Arabia, Japan and Brazil - far fewer than the 33 FDD-LTE commercial networks that have been deployed around the world.

As a man who saw Chinese homegrown 3G technology failing to become truly international, Wang said China Mobile is going to support TD-LTE technology with all its strength. "If China Mobile finds opportunities that will help TD-LTE technology to go global, we will be interested in investing," Wang says.

The company is also actively promoting the convergence of TD-LTE and FDD-LTE technology. "I hope in the era of 4G nobody will have to talk about which wireless standard to choose because everyone will be able to access both TDD and FDD by using the same handset," Wang said.

The biggest challenge for China Mobile remains in the domestic market, as the "running elephant" starts to move at a much slower pace.

In his farewell speech on March 22, Wang said his successor, Xi Guohua, a former vice-minister at the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, has rich leadership experience in the telecommunication industry. Xi values corporate strategy research and is good at viewing things from all angles, Wang says.

shenjingting@chinadaily.com.cn

 

 
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